Live Free Or Die Hard Reviewed by Rich Drees
Live Free Or Die Hard is by no means a bad action film. It’s entertaining for most of its franticly paced runtime, and most of the action sequences satisfy. However, measuring against the rather strong yardstick of the Die Hard franchise, it does come up short.
Die Hard
movies have always been noted for the strength of their villains. In
1988, the first film rocket launched the career of an unknown
British actor named Alan Rickman, thanks to his deliciously snide
and evil performance. Die Harder (1990) contained the one-two
punch of William Sadler and John Amos, while 1995’s Die Hard:
With A Vengeance features Jeremy Irons finding plenty of meat on
his bare bones-scripted character. This time around, though, Timothy
Olyphant’s performance barely registers. In the previous films, the
audience cheered when the villain gets their comeuppance. Here, we
barely shrug. But the blame can’t really be placed on Olyphant
alone. The script barely gives him anything to work with and
develop. His character’s romance with henchwoman Maggie Q is about
as perfunctory as it gets and whatever payoff the relationship is
supposed to have in the film’s third act falls flat because of that.
Also, Olyphant’s ultimate motivation reveals the character to be
having nothing more than a big selfish cry-baby tantrum.
Another tick in this film’s minus column is director Len Wiseman who has shot Live Free Or Die Hard as if it were an installment in his goth-vampire Underworld franchise rather than a Die Hard movie. Some of the sequences are shot in murky lighting, rendering such potentially exciting such as the fight in the SUV wedged in the elevator shaft (don’t ask) difficult to follow.
Although it has been over a decade since he last played the role, Willis slips back into the John McClane character rather effortlessly. The intervening years have not been kind to character and we cynically learn that heroes don’t always get “happily ever afters.” Justin Long, as a computer hacker whom Willis’s character finds himself paired with, may be playing his umpteenth variation on his stock quip-spouting nerd character, but it works well here and he and Willis share a chemistry that helps keep the film from being just a string of action set pieces. Mary Elizabeth Winstead also does good work as McClane’s daughter, even though the part as written describes the same character arc that McClane’s wife, as played by Bonnie Bedelia, did in the first film. |